4.7 Article

Shallow groundwater temperature response to climate change and urbanization

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY
Volume 375, Issue 3-4, Pages 601-612

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2009.07.009

Keywords

Climate change; Urbanization; Groundwater; Heat transfer; Modeling; Temperature

Funding

  1. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, St. Paul, Minnesota

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Groundwater temperatures, especially in shallow (quaternary) aquifers respond to ground surface temperatures which in turn depend on climate and land use. Groundwater temperatures, therefore, are modified by climate change and urban development. In northern temperate climate regions seasonal temperature cycles penetrate the ground to depths on the order of 10-15 m. In this paper, we develop and apply analytic heat transfer relationships for 1-D unsteady effective diffusion of heat through an unsaturated zone into a flowing aquifer a short distance below the ground surface. We estimate how changes in land use (urban development) and climate change may affect shallow groundwater temperatures. We consider both long-term trends and seasonal cycles in surface temperature changes. Our analysis indicates that a fully urbanized downtown area at the latitude of Minneapolis/St. Paul is likely to have a groundwater temperature that is nearly 3 degrees C warmer than an undeveloped agricultural area at the same geographic location. Pavements are the main cause of this change. Data collected by the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) in the St. Cloud, MN area confirm that land use influences groundwater temperatures. Ground surface temperatures are also projected to rise in response to global warming. In the extreme case of a doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide (2 X CO2 climate scenario), groundwater temperatures in the Minneapolis/St. Paul metropolitan area could therefore rise by up to 4 degrees C. Compounding a land use change from undeveloped to fully urbanized and a 2 x CO2 climate scenario, groundwater temperatures are projected to rise by about 5 degrees C at the latitude of Minneapolis/St. Paul. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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